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Foveal processing difficulty does not modulate non-foveal orthographic influences on fixation positions

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posted on 2008-06-19, 08:53 authored by Sarah J. White, S.P. Liversedge
Two experiments show that eye fixations land nearer to the beginning of misspelled than correctly spelled beginning words during sentence reading. The effect holds regardless of whether the previous word is easy (high frequency) or difficult (low frequency) to process. In Experiment 1, the misspelled words were directly fixated. In Experiment 2, a saccade contingent change technique was used such that the words were always correctly spelled once they were fixated. The results show that non-foveal orthography influences where words are first fixated regardless of foveal processing load.

History

Citation

Vision Research, 2006, 46 (3), pp. 426-437

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Vision Research

Publisher

Elsevier

issn

0042-6989

eissn

1878-5646

Copyright date

2005

Available date

2008-06-19

Publisher version

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0042698905003391

Language

en

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